2. ONE COMPANY, GOOGLE, DOMINATES SEARCH
Google controls more than 79%
of search in the U.S. and up to
94% in some EU countries.
Its closest competitor, Bing,
conducts only 9% of general
79% searches.
And don’t forget about mobile search,
where Google has even more control. 2
3. BUT VERTICAL SEARCH IS COMPETITIVE, FOR NOW
Google acknowledges it faces competition from “vertical search engines and e-
commerce sites, such as WebMD (for health queries), Kayak (travel queries),
Monster.com (job queries), and Amazon.com and eBay (commerce).”
VERTICALS LIKE:
“These vertical markets, which like online travel search, serve specialized needs,
require unique inputs and/or technology, and are narrow enough to prevent
Google’s tremendous scale advantage from overwhelming competition, are in a
sense all that remains of the online search frontier.”
“Maintaining competitive markets for both general and niche search
may be the only alternative, ultimately, to an unregulatable
monopoly.”
American Antitrust Institute 2/18/11
3
4. GOOGLE LOOKS TO DOMINATE VERTICAL SEARCH
In order to protect and extend its dominance in search and search
advertising, Google is expanding into these areas of vertical search
and giving preferential placement to its own sites.
Google “Places” links and
GOOGLE’S PRODUCTS
INSERTED IN THE
“ORGANIC” RESULTS
GOOGLE, WITH ITS MONOPOLY POWER, HAS BOTH
THE INCENTIVE AND THE ABILITY TO EXCLUDE
COMPETITORS IN THIS MANNER. 4
5. GOOGLE SAYS…
“We believe users come first.”
“We believe in choice.” “We built Google for
“We believe in transparency.” consumers, not websites.”
Google’s “Facts about Google and Competition” Google’s “Facts about Google and Competition”
THE PROBLEM?
“THE GOALS OF THE ADVERTISING BUSINESS
MODEL DO NOT ALWAYS CORRESPOND TO
PROVIDING QUALITY SEARCH TO USERS.”
Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin
in their Stanford thesis that formed basis for the company
5
6. CASE STUDY: GOOGLE FLIGHT SEARCH
“In mid-2010, Google got serious about travel. Given that over half of travel sales are
consummated online, Google wasted no time with DIY solutions. It went shopping and bid
$700 million in cash to buy ITA Software, a Cambridge (Mass.)-based travel software
company that was founded in 1996 by scientists at MIT to provide search services for
airlines and other travel operators.” [Bloomberg 2/13/11]
WHAT GOOGLE SAID:
6
7. GOOGLE: FLIGHT SEARCH DESIGNED FOR USERS
“Google’s acquisition of ITA Software will create a new, easier way for users to find
better flight information online, which should encourage more users to make their
flight purchases online.”
[Google’s “Facts about Google’s Acquisition of ITA Software”]
Consumers expect the most relevant result
to be listed first.
But is Google Flight Search really the best
tool for answering a user’s travel search
query?
LET’S TAKE IT FOR A
TEST DRIVE…
7
8. NOV. 2011: GOOGLE ROLLS OUT FLIGHT SEARCH
Right away, Flight Search
appeared to be “hard-coded” as PAID AD
the top entry “organic” result SPACE
similar to how Google
preferences Maps or Finance.
Vertical search competitors (in
this case companies like
KAYAK, Expedia and Orbitz)
are pushed out of “organic”
search results and, in order to
be seen, must pay for
advertising.
FLIGHT SEARCH
INSERTED INTO THE
“ORGANIC” RESULTS
ARE THESE REALLY
THE MOST RELEVANT
SEARCH RESULTS?
8
9. MOST CONSUMERS SEEK LOWEST PRICES, BUT…
Unlike most travel search engines,
Google Flight Search does not
initially sort by price.
A query from LAX to JFK on
Google yields a top result priced
at $1,311.
This result is several links above
less-expensive, similar flights
priced at $996.
9
10. GOOGLE EXCLUDES LOWER-PRICED OTA FARES
Google Flight Search excludes from
its own results fares provided through
other online travel sites, like
Expedia, Travelocity and KAYAK.
By excluding these companies from its
searches, Google prevents consumers
from seeing special fares the airlines
have negotiated with consolidators
which combine multiple carriers.
Instead, consumers trying to book
multiple-carrier flights on Google are
instructed to visit the individual
airlines’ websites to purchase one-
way tickets for each of the legs (no
links are provided).
This decreases the likelihood
that the consumer will actually
book this lower-priced flight.
10
11. USERS OFTEN UNABLE TO BOOK TICKETS
Google’s Flight Search only links consumers to a subset of airlines for booking. Instead,
many users are sent to the airline website where they are forced to redo their search.
11
12. FLIGHT SEARCH: ALGORITHM OR BIAS?
Google’s Flight Search initially lists flights by departure time. However, a box at the bottom
indicates some carriers are excluded. Clicking on the “show all results” reveals additional
results – without any obvious reason for exclusion. At best, it’s an inconvenience to users
resulting from its algorithm. At worst, Google has some economic incentive to exclude
these carriers and favor the others.
According to DOT
guidelines, “TO THE
EXTENT AN OTA
OR GDS ENGAGES
IN DISPLAY BIAS, IT
MUST CLEARLY AND
CONSPICUOUSLY
DISCLOSE THAT
FACT.”
12
13. INCIDENCES OF UNAVAILABLE FARES
In some incidences, Google Flight Search returns fares that are not available on the
carriers’ sites and actually cannot be booked by consumers.
13
14. POTENTIAL CONSUMER PROTECTION VIOLATIONS?
GOOGLE’S INITIAL ROLLOUT OF
FLIGHT SEARCH MAY VIOLATE U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
CONSUMER PROTECTION RULES
THAT ENTITIES SELLING AIR TRAVEL
MUST FOLLOW.
14
15. DISCLOSURE OF CODE-SHARING ARRANGEMENTS
DOT requires that flight information on the first screen must include both the name of
the carrier operating the flight and the trade name under which it does business.
Google Flight Search
Second Screen Indicates Flight Operator
DOT Secretary Ray LaHood underscored
the importance of these disclosures for
consumers:
“WHEN PASSENGERS BUY AN AIRLINE TICKET, THEY HAVE THE RIGHT
TO KNOW WHICH AIRLINE WILL BE OPERATING THEIR FLIGHT."
15
16. CHECKED BAG DISCLOSURES
To assist consumers, DOT requires websites
which sell air travel to indicate – on the first
page that includes specific fare information – if
baggage fees may apply, and how consumers
can locate these fees.
From a KAYAK flight search
Google results fail to identify on the
first page that bag charges may apply.
16
17. SO WHY WOULD
GOOGLE STEER
CONSUMERS TOWARD
AN INFERIOR FLIGHT
SEARCH PRODUCT?
17
18. GOOGLE BLAMES THE AIRLINES
Jeremy Wertheimer (ITA founder and now Google Vice President of Travel)
appeared at the PhoCusWright Travel Conference shortly after the roll-out of
Google Flight Search.
Wertheimer confirmed that Google Flight Search would not include online travel
agencies such as Expedia, Priceline and Travelocity or metasearch engines like
KAYAK in the Flight Search results. Google Flight Search would only return
airline results.
Google’s reasoning?
“THE AIRLINES DON’T WANT THE
ONLINE TRAVEL AGENTS INCLUDED.”
WHICH RAISES INTERESTING QUESTIONS: Do all the airlines object to including online travel
agents? Or is Google working with a few airlines to exclude the online travel agents, and smaller airlines?
18
19. ECONOMIC INCENTIVE TO FAVOR AIRLINES
Sandra Heikkinen, a Google spokesperson, says:
“Like any other partner, Google needs to
honor the airline’s distribution decisions.
With the Flight Search feature, that means
we can only show airlines in the booking
links.”
She goes on to say, “We are exploring
advertising opportunities within the page
to showcase the products and services
from other relevant partners, including our
OTA and metasearch partners.The new ad
format experiment is an example of that
exploration.”
In other words, this arrangement
ensures more ad revenue for
Google. 19
20. ECONOMIC INCENTIVE TO FAVOR AIRLINES
As Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry
Page wrote while students at Stanford:
“ADVERTISING INCOME OFTEN
PROVIDES AN INCENTIVE TO
PROVIDE POOR QUALITY
SEARCH RESULTS.”
Since online travel agents and metasearch
engines are not included in the “organic”
results, these sites must purchase
Google’s ad space to remain visible to
consumers.
20
21. ECONOMIC INCENTIVE TO FAVOR AIRLINES
There is another plausible reason for Google to exclude online travel agencies and
metasearch providers, which often provide consumers with greater choices and lower priced
fare options:
GOOGLE IS MOVING TOWARD
A COST-PER-ACQUSITION (CPA)
ADVERTISING MODEL.
What’s the big deal?
A CPA model would mean that Google would get paid when a user purchases a ticket (from
the Flight Search page). With a CPA model, Google would receive a percentage of the sale. (In
the past, Google has employed a “cost-per-click” (CPC) model. That means whenever a user clicks on
an ad on a Google site, Google gets paid a fixed fee.)
And if Flight Search ads are being sold as CPA ad units, then
Google benefits when consumers pay more for airfare.
21
22. ONE STEP CLOSER TO SELLING TICKETS?
During the investigation of Google’s acquisition of ITA Software, Google stated
that it had no plans to sell airline tickets.
WHAT GOOGLE SAID:
But on March 1, 2012, Google announced a new partnership with Cape Air where
it would now support “the airline’s reservations, inventory control system and
departure control system.” That means Google is directly powering the system
that sells airline tickets.
Or, as Tnooz put it: “So Google is a search engine, advertising business, browser
and mobile operating system developer — and now you can add airline
reservations system provider to the mix.” 22
23. GOOGLE FLIP-FLOPS ON ONLINE TRAVEL AGENCIES
After the launch of Flight Search, Google defended the omission of online travel
agencies stating that “the airlines don’t want the online travel agents
included” and “Google needs to honor the airline’s distribution
decisions. With the Flight Search feature, that means we can only show
airlines in the booking links.”
But on March 15, 2012, Google went back on this
promise, adding Orbitz to the Flight Search results.
Orbitz’s inclusion in the results begs several
questions: Have the airlines changed their minds?
Why is Orbitz the only online travel agency in the
results? Is excluding other online travel agencies
and metasearch sites that provide transparency and
choice really in the best interest of consumers?
At the same time, Google added international
flights to Flight Search (as the European Union
continues its investigation into Google’s conduct).
23
24. WHAT EXPERTS ARE SAYING
With Google Flight Search, “[consumers] are not Google Flight Search, at first only providing glimpses of
going to get an impartial search result with itself if one searched for it has now come front and
multiple choices like a traditional OTA, but instead center. If anyone had any doubt that Google is skewing
are likely to end up with a limited menu of options, as its “search” results to help itself, there cannot be any
dictated by the airlines.” doubt now…Under the guise of airline search, Google
Joseph Rubin, president of the Interactive Travel Service Association is presenting self-serving results with the intent to put
in a guest post on Tnooz 12/7/11 competitors, who once paid them for ads based on
search, out of business. Worse, the Google Flight Search
“I can’t imagine this breathtaking dominance escaping result that sits at the top of the faux search results isn’t
the attention of regulators much longer. But if it does even labeled “advertisement,” which it sure as heck is.
— if Google takes over travel — there could be Consumers are being misled today and
serious and long-lasting consequences that tomorrow, after Google puts competitors out of
could harm consumers and businesses. Imagine business, they will find themselves being fleeced.
what might happen to an airline or hotel company that Consumer Travel Alliance 12/19/11
disagrees with the way Google prices its products
when it holds a commanding market share in travel? It
could be cut off from millions of customers with a Google Flight Search is “limiting consumers’ knowledge.
single keystroke. What if Google knocks off one or two This is a situation where Google is trusted as a ‘search
online travel agencies, or a company such as Kayak, engine’ that goes across the whole Web, but it is only
which searches multiple sites for flights? Where do going to a small select group of airlines and including
we go when our only viable option is Google? them in Flight Search…Google and the airlines
What would happen to innovation when one have a sweetheart deal with each other, and the
company controls so much?” consumers are getting screwed.”
Charlie Leocha, director of the
Chris Elliott, consumer advocate and nationally syndicated
Consumer Travel Alliance to Travel Weekly 12/4/11
columnist in the Washington Post 1/4/12
24
25. WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR CONSUMERS?
HIGHER PRICES
FEWER CHOICES
LESS INNOVATION
And it’s not just in travel search…
25
26. GOOGLE’S BEHAVIOR HARMS CONSUMERS
Google’s abuse of its monopoly power harms competition and consumers in
multiple ways.
WEBSITES AND CONTENT
CREATORS: Websites lose traffic
ADVERTISERS: Advertisers pay ever- when Google steers users to its own or
higher fees to Google and have little choice preferred partners’ sites. This means
but to accept Google’s arbitrary terms. competitors have to increase their
advertising spend on Google to try to
make up for that lost traffic.
CONSUMERS: Consumers are misled by Google’s
manipulated search rankings and deceptive and preferential
display of its own sites in response to users’ queries. More
broadly, consumers pay more for goods and services because
WHY SHOULD advertisers are paying more to Google and because of
I CARE? diminished competition among websites. Further, Google’s
exclusionary conduct denies revenue and traffic to sites that
compete with Google, hindering the ability of those sites to
bring more innovative online content and better services to
consumers.
26
27. NOT TO MENTION…
GOOGLE THREATENS:
THE FUTURE OF THE INTERNET
Google’s control over access to information on the Internet threatens
both existing and new Internet businesses.
Simply put, Google’s market power and anticompetitive practices inhibit
other Internet businesses from competing by denying those companies
the user traffic and revenue they need to develop new products, support
innovation, create jobs, and foster economic growth.
For those who are unable to win Google’s favor or those seeking to
enter Internet commerce, Google’s practices present a barrier to entry
and an obstacle to competing on the merits.
WHICH AGAIN CONSUMERS!
HARMS:
27
28. REFERENCES
• Google market share [StatCounter 1/6/12]
• Google acknowledges it faces competition from vertical search engines. [Google 2009
10-K 12/31/09]
• Google’s Facts about Google and Competition [accessed 1/9/12]
• Larry Page and Sergey Brin Stanford Thesis [“Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual
Web Search Engine” 1998]
• Google’s Facts about Google’s Acquisition of ITA software [accessed 1/6/12]
• Screengrab of search JFK to Dallas captured on 12/12/2011
• Google Flight Search screengrab captured on 11/18/2011 for LAX to JFK traveling 11/23
and 11/27
• Google Flight Search screengrab captured on 1/5/2012 for New York to Jackson, MS
traveling 1/21-1/25.
• Google Flight Search screengrabs captured 11/21/2011 for Dallas to LAX traveling
12/12/2011
• Google Flight Search Disclosure of Bias/Checked Bag Disclosure screengrabs captured
11/21/11 for the same flight searches from LAX to JFK traveling 11/23 and 11/27
• Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood on Code Sharing [LA Times 1/17/11]
• Google VP Jeremy Wertheimer at PhoCusWright on 11/17/11 [Consumer Travel
11/17/11]
• Google’s Facts about Google and Competition [accessed 3/5/12]
28
29. “TRUST US” IS NOT ENOUGH
LEARN MORE AT WWW.FAIRSEARCH.ORG